Non-classical B Cell Memory of Allergic IgE Responses
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Saunders, Sean P.; Ma, Erica G. M.; Aranda Clemente, Carlos José; Curotto de Lafaille, María A.Editorial
Frontiers
Materia
Allergy IgE Memory B cells
Fecha
2019-04-26Referencia bibliográfica
Saunders SP, Ma EGM, Aranda CJ and Curotto de Lafaille MA (2019) Non-classical B Cell Memory of Allergic IgE Responses. Front. Immunol. 10:715. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.00715
Patrocinador
NIH/NIAID grants R01AI130343 and R21AI133076; Department of Medicine of New York University Medical School (NYUMS); Bernard Levine postdoctoral fellowship (NYUMS); Fundación Ramón Areces postdoctoral fellowship (Spain); Sacker Institute of Graduate Biomedical Sciences of NYUSMResumen
The long-term effectiveness of antibody responses relies on the development of humoral
immune memory. Humoral immunity is maintained by long-lived plasma cells that
secrete antigen-specific antibodies, and memory B cells that rapidly respond to antigen
re-exposure by generating new plasma cells and memory B cells. Developing effective
immunological memory is essential for protection against pathogens, and is the basis
of successful vaccinations. IgE responses have evolved for protection against helminth
parasites infections and against toxins, but IgE is also a potent mediator of allergic
diseases. There has been a dramatic increase in the incidence of allergic diseases in
recent decades and this has provided the impetus to study the nature of IgE antibody
responses. As will be discussed in depth in this review, the IgE memory response has
unique features that distinguish it from classical B cell memory





